To put it briefly, Serpstat is essentially a marketing tool which allows you to perform various SEO (and PPC) tasks such as keyword research, competition analysis, backlink audit, and position tracking.

But what really differentiates Serpstat from other SEO tools is its affordability factor. There is a free plan available which allows you to get data for up to 30 queries and get access to position tracking and site audit features. And when you want to upgrade, the paid plans start from $19/month, making it the most affordable all-in-one SEO platform in the market.

12 Ways to Use Serpstat to Improve Your Site’s SEO

1) Perform Site Audits to Fix Errors

The first task you should do after logging into to your Serpstat account is to perform a site audit to identify and fix technical SEO issues with your site.

To do this, simply follow these steps:

Go to ‘List of Projects’ and click on ‘Add New Project’

Enter your domain, your domain name and then hit ‘Create’

Within a few seconds, Serpstat will present an audit summary that looks like this:

From the summary, you’ll be able to see your site’s Serpstat Domain Optimization (SDO) Score and the total number of errors on your site, classified into 3 categories: high, medium, and low priority errors.

When you click on the corresponding number against each error type, you’ll be able to see a detailed description for each error and suggestions on how to fix it.

Take a thorough look at all the errors on your site, paying special attention to high priority errors as these are the errors that can really hurt your site’s SEO.

Note: If the SDO score of your site is between 85-100%, it’s a healthy site from SEO perspective and you’ve done a good job keeping it error-free.

2) Collect Benchmark Data

The next thing to do would be to use Serpstat to view the current performance of your site in organic and paid search channels. This information will give you a fair indication as to what aspects of your site you need to improve in order to rank higher in SERPs.

To do this, type your URL into the search box, select the ‘With subdomains’ option from the drop down and hit ‘Search’.

Serpstat will then give you a high-level overview of your site’s performance across different areas – organic keywords, PPC keywords, keyword position distribution, competitors in organic search, rank tracker, and more.

This data will give you a good indication of whether your traffic is increasing or decreasing, if your rankings have improved or deteriorated, and other metrics.

Export this data onto a PDF or spreadsheet and revisit these metrics to check whether your SEO efforts are proving effective.

3) Identify Your Organic Competitors

The next task is to identify your site’s top organic competitors. These are the sites you’re competing against in search engines and share common keywords with.

Serpstat will display a table of your top organic competitors based on relevance, common keywords, and visibility share.

In this example, we can see that Social Media Examiner is a top organic competitor of Hootsuite because of the common keywords and the visibility they share.

Along similar lines, click on common keywords to see how you are ranking in SERPs in comparison to your closest organic competitor.

Missing keywords data will show you unique keywords that your competitor is ranking for. If these keywords are relevant to your business, this data will be invaluable to you while crafting your content strategy.

Export this data onto a spreadsheet for manual review and sorting.

Pro Tip: Make sure you download this data at least once a month to keep a track of your top organic competitors.

4) Review Your Competitor’s Top Performing Content

What are the top ranking pages on your competitor’s site? What kind of content is fetching them the best organic search results? This is what we should aim to uncover next.

Enter your competitor’s domain into the search box and then head to Domain Analysis -> SEO Research -> Top Pages.

This report will show your competitor’s top pages ranking in Google’s Top 100 results. It will also show you the organic keywords, social shares, and potential traffic each page generates from organic search.

In the example above, you can see a blog post on ‘Social Media Templates’ drives organic traffic of 16.4K visitors per month to Hootsuite.

The data obtained from here can help you come up with content ideas for your own site. Take a good look at your competitors’ strengths and weaknesses to create remarkable pieces of content for your site.

5) Find Your Competitor’s Top Performing Keywords

Along the same lines, you can unravel your competitor’s top performing keywords.

Enter your competitor’s URL into the search box and hit ‘Search’.

Click on organic keywords to see all the keywords your competitor’s site is ranking for, along with ranking position, search volume, and competition in PPC.

Export the list of keywords onto a spreadsheet for manual review and sorting. These are the keywords you’d want to target while creating your next piece of content.

Remember: If you want to rank higher than your competitor, you need to create content that is substantially better than the existing content that belongs to your competitors. Use data obtained from #4 and #5 to your advantage in creating killer content for your site.

6) Review Your Backlinks

You need to check your backlink profile from time to time and a tool like Serpstat can help you keep a track of existing as well as new backlinks for your site.

Serpstat will offer a brief overview of your site’s referring domains, pages, total pages indexed, referring pages, and so on. You also get to see Alexa Rank, Serpstat’s Page Rank and Trust Rank metrics (similar to domain authority and page authority by Moz). Below this data, you’ll be able to see a graph of your referring pages in the last 90 days.

If you scroll down, you’ll be able to see the number of new and lost backlinks for your site in the last 90 days, new referring domains in the last 90 days, and anchors that are frequently used on your site.

To do a complete backlink audit, click on ‘Referring Domains’. From here, you can see all the domains that are linking back to your site.

You can export this data onto a CSV or PDF file to revisit later or share as a report to your clients.

7) Review Your Competitor’s Backlinks

It’s not enough to create content that’s better than your competitors. You also need to generate high-quality backlinks for every piece of content you create in order for it to outrank your competitors. One of the easiest ways to do this is to spy on your competitor’s link profile and find new sources to obtain authoritative backlinks.

Pay attention to the total number of referring domains to your competitor’s site. If this is a large number, the chances are the domain authority of your competitor’s site is also very high.

Another aspect you need to monitor is the quality of backlinks your competitor is generating. Backlinks from high DA sites (in this case a high Serpstat Page Rank) indicates a strong link profile.

Spend some time researching your competitor’s link profile to unravel new ideas to build backlinks for your own site.

8) Find Long Tail Keywords

If you want to rank in Google SERPs quickly, then creating content with long tail keywords is your best bet.

Think of a topic you’d like to create content on. For example, content marketing. Type the keywords into the search bar.

From the report, click on ‘Organic Keywords’ to view a selection of keywords on the topic. Serpstat will show you the keyword difficulty and volume for each of the keywords.

Ideally, you’d want to pick a keyword that has a low keyword difficulty score (less than 10) and decent volume (300-500).

These are the keywords with very little competition, meaning you can rank higher in SERPs much faster.

9) Identify Your PPC Competitors

If you use PPC ads to drive traffic to your website, then you’d want to find out who your paid search competitors are.

When you enter a keyword in the search box, you’ll be able to see data related to keywords, competitors for that keyword, ad examples, and ad research. You can even enter your URL in the search box and let Serpstat identify your PPC competitors.

From here, you can view your competitor’s PPC ad copies, the keywords they are bidding for, CPC value, and volume of traffic they generate from Google on a monthly basis.

11) Track Your Search Rankings

Search engine rankings for keywords change frequently. So it’s important to stay ahead of the curve by keeping a track of position changes in SERPs for keywords your site is ranking for.

Navigate to Rank Tracker -> Positions and click on ‘Add Keywords‘ to enter keywords that you’d like to track. You can even select tags or assign specific URLs for each set of keywords.

Once the keywords have been added, Serpstat will display a Rank Distribution graph which shows how your site ranks for the tracked keywords in Google Top 20.

Scroll down to track the ranking position each keyword in SERPs as well as its search volume and position history.

Pro Tip: You can find out your competitor rankings for the tracked keywords by selecting them from the dropdown menu on the upper dashboard.

12) Increase Your Site Speed

Site speed is a key ranking factor on Google and other search engines. Websites with faster load times tend to rank higher in SERPs than websites that are slow. As such, it’s important to fix all the speed related issues with your website.

Serpstat can help you identify page speed and UX issues on your site and suggest improvements for both desktop and mobile versions of your site.

Navigate to Site Audit -> Loading Speed and select your project.

The tool will then show all the errors you’d need to fix to improve your site speed.

Click on any of the errors to see suggestions on how to fix the issue on your website.

1 COMMENT

Hi,
I am amazed what great SEO tool you have shared. Not in big at price but the giant in features. One tool performs the variety of tasks and i am stuck on this feature. I have tried the free version and ready to go with the premium version. Thanks a lot for sharing such a useful post.

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About Me

Hi there, I’m Sandeep Mallya!

I’m an entrepreneur and digital marketing consultant from Bangalore, India. I founded my own digital agency, Startup Cafe Digital, in 2015 where I help SMBs leverage social media, SEO, and content marketing to grow their traffic and generate qualified leads for their business.

I started 99signals in 2016 as a side project to document all the strategies, tools, and tactics that I was using to grow my small agency. The goal was simple: to arm other solopreneurs with all the right information they needed to launch a successful business.

ABOUT ME

Hi there, I’m Sandeep Mallya!

I’m an entrepreneur and digital marketing consultant from Bangalore, India. I founded my own digital agency, Startup Cafe Digital, in 2015 where I help SMBs leverage social media, SEO, and content marketing to grow their traffic and generate qualified leads for their business.

I started 99signals in 2016 as a side project to document all the strategies, tools, and tactics that I was using to grow my small agency. The goal was simple: to arm other solopreneurs with all the right information they needed to launch a successful business.

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99signals is a marketing blog run by me, Sandeep Mallya, to help bloggers and entrepreneurs run a successful side business and earn extra income through blogging and affiliate marketing.